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Monthly Archives: October 2011

There have been several requests to an R User Group in Ireland, so thanks to Kevin O'Brien for stepping up to co-ordinate the Dublin-R group. Kevin invites all R users in the area to the first meeting on November 17: The Dublin R users group will be holding a series of monthly meetings. On the agenda is the development...

My treebase package is now up on the CRAN repository. (Source code is up, the binaries should appear soon). Here’s a few introductory examples to illustrate some of the functionality of the package. Thanks in part to new data deposition … Continue reading →

Everyday, a poor soul tries to understand copulas by reading the corresponding Wikipedia page, and gives up in despair. The incomprehensible mess that one finds there gives the impression that copulas are about as accessible as tensor theory, which is a shame, because they are actually a very nice tool. The only prerequisite is knowing

A recent question on one of the LinkedIn groups about the advantages of using R over commercial tools like SAS or IBM SPSS Modeller drew lots of comments for R. We like R a lot and we use it extensively, but I also wanted to balance the discussion. R is great, but looking at commercial organizations near...

Couple of R programming (mainly infrastructure/workflow) related topics discussed at the Los Angeles R users group in a tutorial/demo-like form (targeted mainly to beginners) by Szilard Pafka and Jeroen Ooms: how easy it is to create a simple package for … Continue reading →

A common approach to reducing risk associated with financial portfolios is diversification. A portfolio made of components that are all highly correlated with each other -- a portfolio composed solely of financial stocks, for example -- is risky, because if there's a wide-spread crisis that affects the banking sector, all components of the portfolio will tank at once, together....

In my previous post, I employed a rather crude and non-parametric approach to see if I could predict the direction of stock returns using the function runs.test(). Lets go a step further and try modelling this with a parametric econometric approach. The company that I choose for the study is INFOSYS (NSE code INFY). Lets start...

Someone asked me how to move a directory full of files from one place to another using R. The easiest way I've found is as follows (where "oldpath" is the existing directory and "newpath" is the new directory):file.copy(list.files(oldpath),newpath)
Tags: R